INSIDER
China files complaint at World Trade Organization over EU tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles
Read full article: China files complaint at World Trade Organization over EU tariffs on Chinese electric vehiclesChina has moved forward with a complaint at the World Trade Organization that alleges the European Union has improperly set anti-subsidy tariffs on new Chinese-made electric vehicles.
The EU is imposing duties on electric vehicles from China after trade talks fail
Read full article: The EU is imposing duties on electric vehicles from China after trade talks failThe European Union says it will impose duties on imports of electric vehicles from China on Wednesday after talks between Brussels and Beijing failed to find an amicable solution to their trade dispute.
EU criticizes France for excessive debt, putting pressure on Macron during election campaign
Read full article: EU criticizes France for excessive debt, putting pressure on Macron during election campaignThe European Union’s executive arm is criticizing France for running up excessive debt, a stinging rebuke at the height of the election campaign where President Emmanuel Macron is fighting off challenges of the extreme right and the left.
The EU will impose tariffs on Russian grain, fearing Moscow will use exports as a weapon of war
Read full article: The EU will impose tariffs on Russian grain, fearing Moscow will use exports as a weapon of warThe European Commission wants to prevent Russia from using agriculture products as a tool to wreak havoc on the EU market and will impose tariffs on grain imports from Russia and Belarus.
EU commissioner calls for more balanced trade with China and warns that Ukraine could divide them
Read full article: EU commissioner calls for more balanced trade with China and warns that Ukraine could divide themThe European Union’s trade commissioner has called for a more balanced relationship with China, noting a trade imbalance of nearly 400 billion euros ($425 billion).
Weeks before EU and Latin American joint summit, trade deal remains elusive
Read full article: Weeks before EU and Latin American joint summit, trade deal remains elusiveThe European Union and the Mercosur group of Latin American nations are still struggling to bridge the last difference before they can reach final agreement on a long-delayed trade deal.
US, EU agree to intensify talks on 'green subsidies' dispute
Read full article: US, EU agree to intensify talks on 'green subsidies' disputeThe United States and European Union have agreed to intensify talks to resolve EU concerns over major subsidies for American companies contained in a U.S. clean energy law.
EU, US edging toward trade spat when both want unity instead
Read full article: EU, US edging toward trade spat when both want unity insteadThe European Union and the United States are treading precariously close to a major trans-Atlantic trade dispute at a time when the two Western giants want to show unity in the face of challenges from Russia and China.
EU eyes cheap loan plan for 'stable' Ukraine funding in 2023
Read full article: EU eyes cheap loan plan for 'stable' Ukraine funding in 2023The European Union is planning to provide Ukraine with around 18 billion euros in financial aid next year to help the war-ravaged country keep its energy and health care facilities running, and to fund salaries and pension schemes.
EU: US electric vehicle tax credit reduces buyers' choices
Read full article: EU: US electric vehicle tax credit reduces buyers' choicesThe European Union trade chief says a new U.S. tax credit aimed at encouraging Americans to buy electric vehicles could eventually backfire and limit choices for American consumers.
Russia's war to keep hitting EU economy, push up inflation
Read full article: Russia's war to keep hitting EU economy, push up inflationEuropean Union expects Russia’s war in Ukraine to wreak havoc with the economic recovery for the foreseeable future through lower annual growth and record-high inflation.
EU to keep budget rules looser for longer amid war fallout
Read full article: EU to keep budget rules looser for longer amid war falloutThe European Union is extending looser limits on spending by member countries for an extra year in a bid to counter the economic fallout from Russia’s war in Ukraine.
EU proposes aid package to help farmers weather Ukraine war
Read full article: EU proposes aid package to help farmers weather Ukraine warThe European Union’s executive arm has proposed a 500 million-euro aid package to help food producers in the 27-nation bloc weather the economic impact of the war in Ukraine.
EU hits Russia with more sanctions: From trade to truffles
Read full article: EU hits Russia with more sanctions: From trade to trufflesThe European Union has published its latest list of sanctions against Russia seeking to deny oligarchs their love of luxury and rob the nation of lucrative steel exports.
Staff shortages, supply backups batter EU economic growth
Read full article: Staff shortages, supply backups batter EU economic growthThe European Union is seeing its economic emergence from the unprecedented COVID-19 slowdown hampered by coronavirus-induced staff shortages, supply bottlenecks, runaway energy prices and subsequent inflation surges.
US, Germany support Lithuania in spat with China over Taiwan
Read full article: US, Germany support Lithuania in spat with China over TaiwanThe United States and Germany are backing Lithuania in its spat with China, saying the pressure exerted by Beijing against the tiny Baltic nation is unwarranted, Lithuania broke with diplomatic custom last year by letting the Taiwanese office in Vilnius bear the name Taiwan, instead of Chinese Taipei.
EU unveils trade sanction plan to counter foreign coercion
Read full article: EU unveils trade sanction plan to counter foreign coercionThe European Union wants to set up a system of trade sanctions that it could impose on any foreign power it accuses of trying to coerce the 27-country bloc for economic or political gain.
Odds of settling US-EU trade rifts? Hope may outrun progress
Read full article: Odds of settling US-EU trade rifts? Hope may outrun progressPresident Joe Biden has vowed to mend America’s trade relations with its European allies, which were stretched to the breaking point by President Donald Trump’s mercurial behavior, combative policies and aversion to multinational alliances.
EU to keep pandemic economic safety net in place next year
Read full article: EU to keep pandemic economic safety net in place next yearThe European Union's executive branch says EU countries will continue to benefit from an economic safety net through next year to help their economies recover from the coronavirus pandemic.
EU, US agree to temporarily suspend tariffs in steel dispute
Read full article: EU, US agree to temporarily suspend tariffs in steel disputeThe European Union has decided to temporarily suspend some measures at the heart of a steel tariff dispute with the United States that is seen as one of the major trade issues dividing the two sides.
EU: Pandemic measures to total about $5.85 trillion
Read full article: EU: Pandemic measures to total about $5.85 trillionThe European Union’s top economy official says that the recovery measures the EU and its 27 member states have in the works to emerge from the pandemic total around $5.85 trillion.
EU plans tightening foreign investment, with eye on China
Read full article: EU plans tightening foreign investment, with eye on ChinaThe European Union is planning to tighten rules on foreign investment in its 27 members and increase production autonomy for sensitive strategic goods, two measures bound to hit China — amid already precarious relations with Beijing.
EU moves toward stricter export controls for COVID-19 shots
Read full article: EU moves toward stricter export controls for COVID-19 shotsSpain resumed the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine on Wednesday. (AP Photo/Alvaro Barrientos)BRUSSELS – The European Union moved Wednesday toward stricter export controls for coronavirus vaccines, seeking to make sure its 27 nations have more COVID-19 shots to boost the bloc's flagging vaccine campaign amid a surge in new infections. Ad“I mention specifically the U.K.,” said EU Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis. That was heading to Australia, which has a very limited coronavirus outbreak compared to the third surge of infections now facing many EU nations. The EU has been feuding with AstraZeneca for months over exactly how many vaccine doses would be delivered by certain dates.
As virus restrictions bite, EU extends safety net till 2023
Read full article: As virus restrictions bite, EU extends safety net till 2023The Commission, the EU’s executive arm, reckons that fiscal support worth around 8% of GDP was provided in 2020, far more than during the financial crisis of 2008-2009. “There is hope on the horizon for the EU economy, but for now the pandemic continues to hurt people’s livelihoods and the wider economy,” Commission Executive Vice-President Valdis Dombrovskis said Wednesday. Ad“To cushion this impact and to promote a resilient and sustainable recovery, our clear message is that fiscal support should continue as long as needed. Based on current indications, the general escape clause would remain active in 2022 and be deactivated in 2023,” Dombrovskis said. The decision to extend the general escape clause is a sign of just how uncertain things are.
EU hopeful for firm economic growth despite virus challenges
Read full article: EU hopeful for firm economic growth despite virus challengesEuropean Commissioner for Economy Paolo Gentiloni speaks during an online news conference at the European Commission headquarters in Brussels, Thursday, Feb. 11, 2021. Growth in the wider 27-nation EU is predicted to hit 3.7% this year and 3.9% in 2022 following last year's 6.3% slide. We will still have a great deal to do to contain the wider socio-economic fallout.”Gentiloni conceded though that the virus is posing major economic and social challenges. “None of the member states is expected return in 2022 to the growth path projected before the crisis. In 2022, GDP in the EU and the euro-area will remain about 4% below what pre-pandemic forecasts had projected,” he said.
EU lawmakers OK $815 billion recovery program
Read full article: EU lawmakers OK $815 billion recovery program(Olivier Hoslet, Pool via AP)BRUSSELS – European Union lawmakers on Wednesday approved a 672.5 billion euro ($815 billion) recovery package of loans and grants to help member nations recover more quickly from the coronavirus pandemic, but countries will not receive the money for several months. The European Parliament voted 582-40, with 69 abstentions, in favor of the regulation for the Recovery and Resilience Facility, the central pillar of the the bloc’s 750 billion euro ($910 billion) recovery plan. Our health systems will also become more resilient.”AdSo far, 18 nations have submitted their draft plans to the European Commission, which is in charge of assessing them. The funding will be available for three years and EU countries can request up to 13% pre-financing for their recovery and resilience plans. Once a proposal allowing the European Commission to borrow on financial markets is ratified by all member nations, the commission expects the first recovery fund payments could be made from mid-2021.
EU: Brexit trade talks still have 'substantial work' ahead
Read full article: EU: Brexit trade talks still have 'substantial work' aheadBRUSSELS – A top European Union official said Wednesday that trade talks with the United Kingdom still face “substantial work" that might spill over into next week, with a perilous deadline drawing ever closer. Valdis Dombrovskis, the EU's top trade official, said “there are still important elements to be resolved. So there is still substantial work to do," if a full agreement is to come into force on Jan. 1. The U.K. left the EU on Jan. 31, but a transition period when EU rules apply to trade and other issues runs until the end of next month. Both sides had hoped to get a trade deal by then to save hundreds of thousands of jobs that could be at stake if Brexit amounts to a brutal cliff edge divorce.
EU puts tariffs on US but hopes for change with Biden
Read full article: EU puts tariffs on US but hopes for change with BidenEuropean trade ministers agreed on the move a few weeks after international arbitrators gave the EU the green light for such punitive action. “The United States is disappointed by the action taken by the EU today,” said U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer. After Trump also imposed tariffs on EU steel and aluminum and threatened punitive duties on cars, the Europeans had hoped that he would hold fire on the tariffs related to the Airbus-Boeing dispute. Asked why the EU didn’t wait until Trump leaves office, Altmaier said: “The U.S. tariffs have already been valid for over a year. Dombrovskis welcomed Biden’s commitment to international alliances, the multilateral system and to improving ties with the EU.
EU cuts 2021 economic outlook as virus spreads
Read full article: EU cuts 2021 economic outlook as virus spreadsBRUSSELS – As COVID-19 cases keep rising, the European Union's executive commission lowered its forecast for the economic rebound from the coronavirus pandemic next year and said the economy wouldn’t reach pre-virus levels until 2023. The regular autumn forecast foresees growth of only 4.2% in 2021 for the 19 countries that use the euro, instead of the previous estimate of 6.1%. The eurozone and the wider 27-country European Union economy saw a robust rebound in July, August and September, following lockdowns and cautious consumer behavior in the first half of the year that crushed business activity. Third-quarter GDP increased by 12.7% from the previous quarter, the largest increase since statistics started being kept in 1995. The European Central Bank is pumping 1.35 trillion euros ($1.58 trillion) into the economy through regular bond purchases, a step aimed at keeping credit flowing affordably to businesses.
Key EU states worry South America trade pact may hurt Amazon
Read full article: Key EU states worry South America trade pact may hurt AmazonValdis Dombrovskis, Vice-President of the EU Commission, speaks at a press conference in Berlin, Germany, following the informal talks of the EU Trade Ministers on Monday, Sept. 21, 2020. And we will need definitely to have more discussions between us.”Following two decades of negotiations, the trade pact was announced last year by the European Commission, the executive body that negotiates trade agreements on behalf of EU countries. The preliminary deal, which needs to be ratified by all EU countries, was struck with the Mercosur bloc of Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. Speaking after the meeting, EU Commission vice-president Valdis Dombrovskis confirmed that several member states expressed concerns relating to the Paris agreement and deforestation, especially in Brazil. Dombrovskis added that the trade deal is still in the process of undergoing legal revision and that the EU Commission will decide on the ratification procedure at a later stage.
EU names Dombrovskis as its new trade chief
Read full article: EU names Dombrovskis as its new trade chiefBRUSSELS The European Unions executive commission is proposing its experienced Latvian vice president, Valdis Dombrovskis, to take over the post as trade chief of the bloc following the resignation of Ireland's Phil Hogan. EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen made the announcement as she named European Parliament heavyweight Mairead McGuinness as the new financial services commissioner to fill Ireland's seat at the table. Dombrovskis had already been holding the post temporarily since Hogan's resignation on Aug. 26. Dombrovskis now fills a vital post in dealing with the United States, China and post-Brexit Britain, with all three demanding near daily attention. It also means von der Leyen limited her reshuffle in the Commission and with McGuinness she further narrowed the gender gap in the Commission, which now stands at 14 men and 13 women.
EU says virus fund access to be linked to its budget advice
Read full article: EU says virus fund access to be linked to its budget adviceVirtually every country has broken the deficit limit of 3% of GDP as theyve spent to keep health care systems, businesses and jobs alive. But these are exceptional times, European Commission Executive Vice-President Valdis Dombrovskis said. The commissions country specific recommendations released Wednesday are part of a system under which the executive arm monitors national budgetary plans and gives policy advice. He did not provide details about how the recommendations would be linked to the recovery funds. Hard-hit countries like Italy and Spain will probably be banking on the recovery fund to survive.